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Participant
October 4, 2019
Answered

Rating applied in Bridge not saved to JPG file

  • October 4, 2019
  • 1 reply
  • 4121 views

I'm running Adobe Bridge version 9.1.0.338 on Windows 10 and I can't seem to do something that I figured would be extremely easy. I'd like to adjust the star rating of some JPG files in Bridge, and have those ratings reflected in the Windows File Rating metadata. However, I do not seem to be able to make a change in Bridge that is reflected in Windows.


 

Can anyone offer a suggestion as to what I may be doing wrong? Thanks!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Stephen Marsh

The problem is conflicting metadata. My initial findings using ExifTool comparing files rated by Bridge and Windows 10 are as follows...

 

Adobe software uses the following metadata for a 5 star rating:

 

[XMP-xmp] Rating : 5

 

While Microsoft Windows does write this same metadata, it also additionally uses its own system:

 

[XMP-xmp] Rating : 5
[XMP-microsoft] RatingPercent : 99

 

(1 Star = 1, 2 Stars = 25, 3 Stars = 50, 4 Stars = 75, 5 Stars = 99)

 

It also appears that Windows is writing the same tags/values to a different metadata group (EXIF), which is likely there to support older versions of Windows that did not use XMP:

 

[IFD0] Rating : 5
[IFD0] RatingPercent : 99

 

Adobe software does not write the second MS metadata tag in red, so there is a conflict if the file has been handled by both software using different ratings.

 

Therefore the answer is to not change any ratings using MS Windows and only use Adobe Bridge to change ratings if you wish to have cross-application consistency.

 

P.S. I am not sure if it is possible to write a Bridge script that would also write the MS metadata to match the Bridge metadata or just remove the MS metadata conflict, even if possible for the XMP tag group – I have a feeling that it would not handle the EXIF/IFD0 tag group.

 

You can remove the Windows metadata using ExifTool or the Windows GUI:

 

 

1 reply

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Stephen MarshCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
October 5, 2019

The problem is conflicting metadata. My initial findings using ExifTool comparing files rated by Bridge and Windows 10 are as follows...

 

Adobe software uses the following metadata for a 5 star rating:

 

[XMP-xmp] Rating : 5

 

While Microsoft Windows does write this same metadata, it also additionally uses its own system:

 

[XMP-xmp] Rating : 5
[XMP-microsoft] RatingPercent : 99

 

(1 Star = 1, 2 Stars = 25, 3 Stars = 50, 4 Stars = 75, 5 Stars = 99)

 

It also appears that Windows is writing the same tags/values to a different metadata group (EXIF), which is likely there to support older versions of Windows that did not use XMP:

 

[IFD0] Rating : 5
[IFD0] RatingPercent : 99

 

Adobe software does not write the second MS metadata tag in red, so there is a conflict if the file has been handled by both software using different ratings.

 

Therefore the answer is to not change any ratings using MS Windows and only use Adobe Bridge to change ratings if you wish to have cross-application consistency.

 

P.S. I am not sure if it is possible to write a Bridge script that would also write the MS metadata to match the Bridge metadata or just remove the MS metadata conflict, even if possible for the XMP tag group – I have a feeling that it would not handle the EXIF/IFD0 tag group.

 

You can remove the Windows metadata using ExifTool or the Windows GUI:

 

 

Participant
October 7, 2019

Stephen,
      Thank you for the detailed reply. Your answer makes perfect sense and it has helped me make progress to get past this issue.

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 7, 2019

Great, please mark my previous reply as correct so that others in the same situation know that there is a solution, thanks.